Murty Vishnu P, Tompary Alexa, Adcock R Alison, Davachi Lila
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213.
Department of Psychology, New York University, New York, New York 10003.
J Neurosci. 2017 Jan 18;37(3):537-545. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4032-15.2016.
Reward motivation has been demonstrated to enhance declarative memory by facilitating systems-level consolidation. Although high-reward information is often intermixed with lower reward information during an experience, memory for high value information is prioritized. How is this selectivity achieved? One possibility is that postencoding consolidation processes bias memory strengthening to those representations associated with higher reward. To test this hypothesis, we investigated the influence of differential reward motivation on the selectivity of postencoding markers of systems-level memory consolidation. Human participants encoded intermixed, trial-unique memoranda that were associated with either high or low-value during fMRI acquisition. Encoding was interleaved with periods of rest, allowing us to investigate experience-dependent changes in connectivity as they related to later memory. Behaviorally, we found that reward motivation enhanced 24 h associative memory. Analysis of patterns of postencoding connectivity showed that, even though learning trials were intermixed, there was significantly greater connectivity with regions of high-level, category-selective visual cortex associated with high-reward trials. Specifically, increased connectivity of category-selective visual cortex with both the VTA and the anterior hippocampus predicted associative memory for high- but not low-reward memories. Critically, these results were independent of encoding-related connectivity and univariate activity measures. Thus, these findings support a model by which the selective stabilization of memories for salient events is supported by postencoding interactions with sensory cortex associated with reward.
Reward motivation is thought to promote memory by supporting memory consolidation. Yet, little is known as to how brain selects relevant information for subsequent consolidation based on reward. We show that experience-dependent changes in connectivity of both the anterior hippocampus and the VTA with high-level visual cortex selectively predicts memory for high-reward memoranda at a 24 h delay. These findings provide evidence for a novel mechanism guiding the consolidation of memories for valuable events, namely, postencoding interactions between neural systems supporting mesolimbic dopamine activation, episodic memory, and perception.
奖励动机已被证明可通过促进系统水平的巩固来增强陈述性记忆。尽管在一次经历中高奖励信息常与低奖励信息混合在一起,但对高价值信息的记忆会被优先处理。这种选择性是如何实现的呢?一种可能性是,编码后巩固过程会使记忆强化偏向于那些与更高奖励相关的表征。为了验证这一假设,我们研究了不同奖励动机对系统水平记忆巩固的编码后标记物选择性的影响。人类参与者在功能磁共振成像(fMRI)采集过程中对混合的、每次试验都不同的记忆内容进行编码,这些内容与高价值或低价值相关。编码过程与休息时段交错进行,这使我们能够研究与后续记忆相关的依赖于经验的连接性变化。在行为层面,我们发现奖励动机增强了24小时的联想记忆。对编码后连接模式的分析表明,尽管学习试验是混合的,但与高奖励试验相关的高级类别选择性视觉皮层区域的连接性显著更强。具体而言,类别选择性视觉皮层与腹侧被盖区(VTA)和前海马体的连接性增加预测了高奖励记忆而非低奖励记忆的联想记忆。至关重要的是,这些结果独立于与编码相关的连接性和单变量活动测量。因此,这些发现支持了一种模型,即通过与奖励相关的感觉皮层的编码后相互作用来支持对显著事件记忆的选择性稳定。
奖励动机被认为通过支持记忆巩固来促进记忆。然而,关于大脑如何基于奖励为后续巩固选择相关信息知之甚少。我们表明,前海马体和VTA与高级视觉皮层的连接性依赖于经验的变化选择性地预测了24小时延迟后对高奖励记忆内容的记忆。这些发现为指导有价值事件记忆巩固的新机制提供了证据,即支持中脑边缘多巴胺激活、情景记忆和感知的神经系统之间的编码后相互作用。